您的位置: 首页 > 外文期刊论文 > 详情页

Changes in Externalizing and Internalizing Symptoms Among African American Female Adolescents Over 1 Year Following a Mother-Daughter Sexual Health Intervention

作   者:
Kendall, Ashley D.Young, Christina B.Bray, Bethany C.Emerson, Erin M.Freels, SallyDonenberg, Geri R.
作者机构:
IL 60612 USA CA 94305 USAUniv IllinoisStanford Univ Dept Med Sch Med Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci Stanford 818 South Wolcott Ave Ctr Disseminat & Implementat Sci Div Epidemiol & Biostat Sch Publ Hlth Chicago
关键词:
sexually transmitted infection (STI)externalizing symptomsinterventionmother-daughterAfrican American
期刊名称:
Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
i s s n:
0022-006X
年卷期:
2020 年 88 卷 6 期
页   码:
495-503
页   码:
摘   要:
Objective: African American female adolescents face disparities compared with White peers in the interrelated areas of mental health symptoms and sexually transmitted infection (STI) acquisition. IMARA (Informed, Motivated, Aware and Responsible about AIDS) is a group-based mother- daughter intervention addressing these factors among African American teenagers. Previous work demonstrated that female adolescents who received IMARA were 43% less likely than controls to evidence a new STI at 1 year. This report aimed to provide the 1st test of IMARA on externalizing and internalizing symptoms and an exploratory analysis of whether symptom improvements were associated with the protective effect of treatment against future STIs. Method: Female African Americans aged 14-18 years (M = 16; N = 199) were randomly assigned to IMARA or a health promotion control group matched for time and structure. They completed the Youth Self-Report of externalizing and internalizing symptoms at baseline and at 6 and 12 months and were tested for STIs at baseline and 12 months; positive cases were treated. Hierarchical linear modeling tested symptom change over time, including the moderating effects of baseline symptoms. Results: Among participants who entered with high versus lower externalizing symptoms, those who received IMARA showed a slightly greater decrease in externalizing scores relative to the control (p = .035). For these youth, symptom improvements appeared to be associated with IMARA's protective effect against new STIs. Treatment was not associated with internalizing symptom change (p > .05). Conclusion: IMARA shows promise in modestly reducing self-reported externalizing symptoms, although only for participants with high scores at baseline. The possibility that externalizing symptom improvement is linked with reduced STI acquisition warrants future examination.
相关作者
载入中,请稍后...
相关机构
    载入中,请稍后...
应用推荐

意 见 箱

匿名:登录

个人用户登录

找回密码

第三方账号登录

忘记密码

个人用户注册

必须为有效邮箱
6~16位数字与字母组合
6~16位数字与字母组合
请输入正确的手机号码

信息补充